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| DVD - 2-Disc Special Edition - Wide Screen / Pan & Scan | $9.99 |
Closed Caption; [None specified]
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Main Title/"Hold Me Touch Me" [:22]
2. Landlord and Loiterer [7:41]
3. The Creative Accountant [2:21]
4. Lunch Al Fresco [11:34]
5. "I'll Do It!" [2:14]
6. Whither the Worst Play? [1:47]
7. The Conci-Urge [2:25]
8. Yankee Doodle Nazi [1:09]
9. The Hitler We Never Knew [1:57]
10. Little-Old-Lady-Land [2:20]
11. Bialy Bilks the Biddies [2:21]
12. 25,000 Percent Invested! [1:30]
13. Ulla-La! [1:19]
14. A Tight Squeeze [4:15]
15. A Vision of De Bris [2:08]
16. Singing Hitlers Only [4:18]
17. Love Power [3:19]
18. Pre-Curtain Titters [4:15]
19. Springtime for Hitler [2:29]
20. 2nd Chance for the 1st Act [3:43]
21. A Teast to Being Toast [4:12]
22. The Flop Flips [1:38]
23. "I Love My Little Joe" [1:49]
24. "Where Did I Go Right?" [2:28]
25. A Very Sour Kraut [2:56]
26. Bombing on Broadway [3:50]
27. Liar, Cheat, Humanitarian [2:51]
28. Prisoners of Love/Credits [3:14]
The Producers, Mel Brooks's wildly hilarious directorial debut and the source for his Tony Award-winning Broadway musical, soars with savage satire and one of the most perfect pairings in movie history: Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder. Mostel portrays a grandiose but washed-up Broadway producer who teams up with Wilder's timid accountant to produce the worst show ever written, as part of a scheme to defraud investors. The chemistry between the two leads bubbles with animosity, affection, and mutually enabling dementia. Mostel reaches unimaginable heights of wide-eyed mania in scenes where he seduces a bevy of adoring octogenarians in order to bilk them out of their money. And in his first great role, the inimitable Wilder incorporates both his perpetual smirk and his patented hysterical rants into a multilayered portrayal of a of a man who is at first cajoled and bullied into -- but finally embraces -- a crazy dream. To top it all off is the play itself, "Springtime for Hitler: A Gay Romp with Adolf and Eva at Berchtesgaden," which stars Dick Shawn as a hepcat Hitler who grooves his way through the Great War. An over-the-top exercise in bad taste, it combines tap-dancing and goose-stepping with shameless glee. But let the viewer beware: the title song, "Springtime for Hitler," is a genuinely catchy tune that, once heard, is difficult to shake. This legendary comedy classic simply has to be seen to be believed. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble
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